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This Week

This week we take on ... this week. Stories united by one thing: They all happened in the seven days prior to broadcast. We try our hand reporting the global stories in Egypt and Afghanistan; and take on super local stories, too, like a man who tries valiantly — valiantly! — to actually get out of bed when his alarm clock goes off.

A 17 year old Ethiopian girl who is just learning English goes with her teacher to face her fears head-on: She orders tea in a local coffee shop. A woman in America talks to Ira about her husband, in Syria, who is currently negotiating with kidnappers for the release of two of his employees. In Doha, Qatar, the lead negotiator for the Philippines at the United Nations Climate Change Conference implores world governments to take action now. The Missoula Community Theater puts on a special performance of their Christmas musical, adapted to an audience of people on the autism spectrum. A group of 10 year-old girls in Charlottesville, Virginia, talk smack while competing in a local step competition. And a man on the Airtrain at Newark Airport gets ready to meet his newly-discovered half-brother. (11 minutes)

This American Life contributor Hyder Akbar heads into Kunar Province in
Eastern Afghanistan to report back on life there this week. Things look
good until he gets ambushed, shot at and his car catches on fire on his way
back home.
(15 minutes)

A group called NO/AIDS heads into bars to offer free HIV testing for high-risk people. Writer Nathaniel Rich tells the story of one man's test. Nathaniel is the author of the forthcoming book Odds Against Tomorrow. (6 minutes)

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It's been a tumultuous week of protests and demonstrations in Egypt. Nancy
Updike talks to two Egyptian men whose ideologies are completely opposite,
except one thing unites them: Their anger at the United States.
(6 minutes)

We hear from the people in the land of the non-working: Fred Beaton on his
last shift driving a shuttle bus at Logan Airport before he retires; Linc
Cohen and Sandi Weisenberg talk about what chores get done once retirement
begins; and Angela Jane Evancie tries to get her boyfriend, Morgan Peach, to
stop relaxing quite so much.
(5 minutes)